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The author

Jethro K. Lieberman is the author of many books on law, the Constitution, and public policy, among other topics. Two, The Litigious Society (Basic Books, 1981) and The Enduring Constitution (West and Oxford University Press, 1988), won the American Bar Association’s top literary prize, the Silver Gavel Award. Among his other books are The Tyranny of the Experts (Walker, 1970), Crisis at the Bar: Lawyers’ Unethical Ethics and What to Do about It (W. W. Norton, 1978), A Practical Companion to the Constitution (University of California Press, 1999), and Liberalism Undressed (Oxford University Press, 2012). Early in his career he practiced law and was a legal journalist. Thereafter he taught law for 33 years. He is a graduate of Yale College and Harvard Law School, and has a Ph.D. in political science from Columbia University.

For a brief biography and a complete list of Jethro K. Lieberman’s books, click here.

Offense of the Month

Offense of the Month, December 2018
How do you get to be an offender of the month? If you’re in the right place at the right time — or maybe make that the wrong place at the wrong time — it’s pretty easy. You can do it in just three simple steps: (1) Take insensitive photos making light of and even mocking a disaster that killed scores of people. (2) Affix stupid captions that traffic in others’ grief. (3) Post your artwork to Facebook. Then just sit back and wait for it all to be discovered.

Until about two weeks ago, Freestone was a crane operator employed by Bigge Crane and Rigging, a company hired to begin recovery efforts in Paradise, California, the worst hit of the many towns in Butte County, where the horrific Camp Fire killed at least eighty-five people and destroyed more than fourteen thousand homes in the space of seventeen days in November. The company’s job was to check and trim trees that posed an acute danger to returnees, rescue workers, and others.

Nosing about the ravaged properties, Freestone took a number of photos — a charred cat, a wrecked structure, a mailbox tricked out as a fire truck. Appended to each was Freestone’s idea of a funny caption — e.g., on the wrecked structure, showing two people appearing to be in the ruins of a vehicle beneath the legend: “They’re off on a fun filled vacation to unknown destinations in their new RV.”

The uproar wasn’t instantaneous. It took victims and others a month or so to discover and focus on the photos. But when they were posted to the Town of Paradise website in mid-December, the aggrieved lit up a public information recovery clearinghouse website with denunciations. Condemning Freestone’s “unacceptable and reprehensible behavior,” the Paradise town manager made it clear that Freestone and two co-workers “will no longer be working in our Town.” Bigge Crane didn’t hesitate. It fired the three within hours, proclaiming it had “identified the three participants in this abhorrent event and their employment has been terminated.” read-more..